Saskatoon Transit

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Saskatoon Transit
File:Saskatoon Transit logo.png
250px
Founded 1913
Headquarters 301 24th Street West
Locale Saskatoon, SK
Service area Saskatoon
Service type bus service, paratransit, bus rapid transit
Routes 23 + school specials
Fleet 188 buses[1] including 110 low-floor, (included in the 110 are 9 low-floor 60-foot articulated buses, 6 twenty-one passenger shuttle buses and 8 hybrid
Annual ridership 11 million[1]
Fuel type Diesel
Operator City of Saskatoon
Website Saskatoon Transit
File:SRM-StreetCar.jpg
Streetcar#40 in original Saskatoon Municipal Railway livery at the Saskatchewan Railway Museum.

Saskatoon Transit is the public transport arm of the City of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. It operates a fleet of diesel buses. A total of 23 bus routes serve every area of the city, carrying approximately 11 million passengers in 2008.[1] Saskatoon Transit is a member of the Canadian Urban Transit Association. The major bus terminal is located Downtown.

History

Saskatoon Transit was initially known as Saskatoon Municipal Railway and began operating on January 1, 1913 with a fleet of streetcars.[2][3] Service as far as Sutherland began in 1914 when it was still a separate village.[3] The servicing garage was (and remains) located in the Caswell Hill neighbourhood, on the north side of 24th Street between Avenues C and D. (A second garage now faces it across 24th Street.)

The central transfer point for most bus routes has always been the block of 23rd Street between 2nd and 3rd Avenues and the neighbouring corners on 2nd and 3rd Avenues. In 1984, this block was permanently closed to regular traffic and a "Transit Terminal" constructed, consisting of widened sidewalks, heated shelters, and angled curbs to provide three "bays" on each side of the block. The 23rd Street Transit Terminal was opened on November 2, 1984.[3] This terminal area is perceived by many as unsafe, and most of the businesses along this block have relocated; however, Saskatoon Transit has made some recent improvements, including a constant security guard presence and a Customer Service Centre where tickets, passes and schedules may be obtained. The 2005 Strategic Plan Study recommended that major improvements be carried out to the downtown terminal, but as of 2007 no changes have been made.

Diesel buses supplemented the streetcar service from at least 1938. In the 1940s a decision was made to replace streetcar service with trolley buses; the first trolley bus ran on November 22, 1948, starting a three-year transition period, and the last streetcar ran on November 10, 1951. With the demise of the streetcars, Saskatoon Municipal Railway was renamed Saskatoon Transit System on August 15, 1949. The trolley buses were in turn phased out and ran for the last time on May 10, 1974.[2]

Although the official name is now Saskatoon Transit Services (as of 1998), it is generally known simply as Saskatoon Transit, which is what appears on their Web page, logo, and all their brochures.

Two of the original Saskatoon streetcars are on display and being restored at the Saskatchewan Railway Museum.

2005 Strategic Plan Study

File:Saskatoon transit customer service 23d St.JPG
Customer Services Centre at 23d Street transit terminal
File:Saskatoon 23d St transit terminal 2.JPG
23d Street transit terminal, looking toward Third Avenue
File:Saskatoon 23d St transit terminal 1.JPG
23d Street terminal, looking toward Second Avenue

A comprehensive study[4] of Saskatoon Transit's service was undertaken in 2005, outlining many deficiencies and making many recommendations. Transit ridership had fallen from 12.4 million passengers in 1987 to 7.2 million passengers in 2005, while the city's population increased from 182,000 to 214,000. The conclusions of the study were summarised in a Short Term Plan and a Long Term Plan. Most of the recommendations of the Short Term Plan have been implemented, and the Long Term Plan is being carried out, subject of course to funding and other considerations.

The main recommendations of the Short Term Plan were to re-orient the current regular service network to better serve the University of Saskatchewan and other key destinations, to introduce higher-order "DART" service on four corridors interlined into two routes, and to construct a new bus terminal at Market Mall, as well as to make major improvements to the terminals downtown and at the University.

The routes in place prior to 2006 had not been substantially modified since the 1970s, and some since the 1950s, with the result that many neighbourhoods, particularly the newer suburbs, had poor service. Some areas such as Montgomery Place and Briarwood had no bus service at all on weekends. Many outlying neighbourhoods (e.g., Dundonald, Silverspring, Briarwood) had "stub routes" that deposited riders at a suburban mall transfer point, necessitating a transfer, and often two or three, to get anywhere in the city. Post-secondary institutions were under-served relative to the number of students using the buses; SIAST Kelsey Campus had only one major route serving it, so that trips to SIAST from most places in Saskatoon involved a transfer onto an overcrowded bus. Due to extreme congestion at the University of Saskatchewan, several routes bypassed the campus altogether, forcing students to cross College Drive on foot. Service to the airport was nonexistent, and service to industrial areas was extremely poor. Demand in these areas was also extremely low, at least in part due to the poor service.

The Market Mall terminal has been built, and a temporary terminal with car traffic prohibited has been built at the University, pending a longer-term solution. Work has yet to begin on improving or relocating the downtown terminal.

The Long Term Plan is a 10-year plan that focuses on the infrastructure needed to maintain the improvements to the system implemented in the Short Term Plan and expansion needed to keep up with the expected increases in ridership that the improvements will generate. Issues include staffing, fleet replacement, refurbishing older buses, maintenance, new technologies such as emissions reduction and "smart" fare collection. Critical items include:

  • Rejuvenating the fleet. The industry standard is to replace buses on an 18-year cycle; by this standard, Saskatoon Transit's fleet is quite old. The plan recommends replacing 6 buses a year through 2010, and 7 buses a year for the remaining years of the plan, as well as expanding the fleet by 12 buses.
  • New transit garage. The current transit garage is too small for the fleet and surrounded by residential properties that make it undesirable if not impossible to expand the facility. A satellite facility or entirely new facility in a different location, probably an industrial park, is recommended within the next 5 years.
  • More bus shelters. The plan recommends a target number of 215 bus shelters (30% of stops), or 22 per year over the course of the plan, up from 3 or 4 per year that are currently installed. This would include shelters at all DART stops, perhaps of a distinctive design.
  • Fare technology. A review of fare collection options, and in particular smart card technology, should be undertaken within a year.
  • Transit-oriented development. Work with urban planners to design neighbourhoods that work with public transit and discourage use of private vehicles.
  • Signal priority and queue-jump lanes. Allow buses to avoid congestion by "turning the lights green" for them, and providing bus-only lanes where needed, for instance at the approaches to University Bridge.

Fares

Fares may be paid by the Go-Pass smart card, or cash (coins only effective February 2010). The adult cash fare is currently $3.10 (as of Feb 2014), which includes unlimited transfers for 90 minutes from time of payment. Primary and secondary school students pay reduced fares.

Seniors are eligible for discounted passes lasting 3 months to a year. Riders on social assistance are also eligible for discounted monthly passes.

Post-secondary students

University of Saskatchewan undergraduate students pay a mandatory U-PASS fee (currently $69.50 per term) for a universal transit pass, in the form of a validation sticker on their student card. Students living in on-campus residences and others with special circumstances may apply for an exemption.

Other post-secondary students may purchase a 4-month semester pass at a slightly reduced price compared to the adult monthly pass.

Go-Pass

Effective February 2010, Saskatoon Transit has upgraded its fare system to use a smart card system called Go-Pass. The card has replaced tickets, day passes and monthly passes, respectively with a refillable fare card and unlimited-fare cards that expire after a day or month. The system cost Saskatoon Transit $2.9 million. The system's roll-out date was delayed to February 2010 in order to avoid problems with the new system during the 2010 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships.

Smart cards have been adopted to limit fraud—such as forged monthly passes and short-changed fares—and to reduce the potential for conflict between driver and passenger. Rather than showing the card to the driver, the card is swiped across the reader and may remain inside a wallet. Transfers are barcoded and scanned when a passenger boards. The new fare boxes do not accept bills, but coins are accepted and the values displayed to both rider and driver.

Routes

Route names

File:Saskatoon Transit downtown terminal 01.jpg
Downtown transit terminal in Saskatoon

The names next to each route number are displayed on the front of each bus.

After waiting in queue for months, the city of Saskatoon will partner with Google Transit to provide an online mapping website. This interface will take the routes and city schedules currently available and google maps will then calculate for the website viewer the optimal connection for transport between two addresses and the time to be at the designated bus stop for bus service.[5]

DART (Direct Access Rapid Transit)

The DART routes are Saskatoon Transit's flagship service. The four DART routes interline in the central sections to form two corridors with extremely frequent service. Along this portion of their routes, bus stops are widely spaced to increase speed, and there are "express" sections on each route with no stops for over a kilometre. The interlined routes 50/60 run from Confederation Mall to The Centre via downtown and the University of Saskatchewan, and routes 70/80 run from The Mall at Lawson Heights to the University Heights Suburban Centre via SIAST Kelsey Campus, downtown and the University. The routes continue past these points, each serving a residential loop at either end (a total of 8 loops). Low floor buses are used on the DART routes. Some of these buses are air-conditioned and all have bicycle racks on the front.

Regular and commuter routes

There are 18 non-DART bus routes. Although the buses serving these routes are generally older, about a third of the non-DART buses are now low-floor. Most have a blue livery.

The non-DART routes are numbered 1–8, 10, 12–14, 17, 20–25, 28 and 29. These routes provide comprehensive geographical coverage of every area of the city not already served by the DART routes, with more frequent stops and less frequent service than their DART counterparts. Many routes meet at the downtown terminal (except 13, 17, 21, 23–25, 28 and 29 all of which serve the University Terminal.)

Routes 20, 22, 24, and 25 were conceived as peak-hour routes to provide additional service for commuters. Some only operate in one direction at a time, either towards the downtown or the University in the morning, or towards their respective terminals in the afternoon. The others (24 and 25) run both directions, but hourly during the peak hours only. The 24 and 25 both have one trip in the morning operate a slightly modified route from the Downtown Terminal. Route 29 serves Rosewood, during the week during daytime hours. Route 23, although numbered as a commuter route, is in fact a regular route connecting the Confederation Mall terminal to Hampton Village and Blairmore, two new subdivisions that are not completely developed. During the peak hours Monday to Saturday, each trip operates past Hampton Village and to Robin Crescent in the Airport Business Area.

Route 28 began operation on September 7, 2010 and travels in the opposite direction as the eastern portion of Route 4 (Willowgrove), before heading north on McOrmond Drive to the Evergreen subdivision, which isn't completely developed and terminates in Forest Grove during the peak hours and the University during the off-peak hours. The service frequency during the off-peak hours is less than the other regular routes – 60 minutes compared to the regular 30. Peak hour service remains at 30 minutes.

Service frequencies

Routes Monday – Friday Peak Monday – Friday Midday Monday – Saturday Night Saturday AM Saturday PM Sunday/Holiday
(Start to 9:30 AM, 3:00 PM to 6:15 PM) (9:30 AM to 3:00 PM) (6:15 PM to End) (Start to 11:00 AM) (11:00 AM to 6:15 PM) (All Day)
1–6, 11–14, and 23 30 minutes 30 minutes 60 minutes 60 minutes 30 minutes 60 minutes
17 30 minutes 30 minutes No service No service No service No service
21, 22 30 minutes No service No service No service No service No service
24, 25 60 minutes No service No service No service No service No service
28 30 minutes 60 minutes No service No service No service No service
40 30 minutes 30 minutes No service No service No service No service
DART (50, 60, 70 and 80) 15 minutes 15 minutes 30 minutes 30 minutes 15 minutes 30 minutes
90 15 minutes 15 minutes No service No service No service No service

NOTES: DART bus frequency is half the above on non-interlined parts of the routes. Routes 21 and 22 provide peak-direction service only. Route 90 follows portions of the 50/60 and 70/80 DARTs from the University remaining to the east of the campus and runs during the peak hours only creating 7.5 minute frequency during that time.

Combined routes

Some buses change their route number at their terminals, which is also known as a "stay-in-seat transfer" because the passengers do not have to leave the bus when it changes to the different route. The list of these "transfers" is as follows:

  • 1 Wildwood becomes 8 8th Street at The Centre
  • 2 Meadowgreen becomes 7 Dundonald at Confederation Mall
  • 7 Dundonald becomes 2 City Centre at Confederation Mall
  • 8 8th Street becomes 1 Exhibition at The Centre
  • 9 Montgomery becomes 10 City Centre at Confederation Mall
  • 10 Pleasant Hill becomes 9 Riversdale at Confederation Mall

Other services

School service, special events, charter

Saskatoon Transit operates special morning and afternoon service to many of the city's schools, and also serves events at Credit Union Centre. Buses are also available for charter trips within 40 km of the city centre. Special routes which are available to the general public have route numbers in the 300-series, with route 399 being the Credit Union Centre special from the downtown terminal. Credit Union Centre sometimes offers charter service from locations other than the downtown, but because these are charter services which regular fare, passes and transfers do not apply, these do not have route numbers.

Access Transit

Access Transit is a shared-ride door-to-door service for people who are unable to use regular transit services. Passengers are required to register in the system and book their trips in advance, either on a per-trip basis or as a regularly scheduled "subscription trip". Fares and payment are the same as for regular transit service. Access Transit in Saskatoon has been used as a model for other cities in Canada and the United States.

Fleet

Saskatoon Transit's fleet consists almost exclusively of 40-foot (12 m) diesel buses, of which there are approximately 120 in service. Saskatoon also has 3, 60-foot (18 m) articulated buses made by Nova Bus. The 76 buses acquired since 1995 are New Flyer low-floor buses; these now make up more than half the fleet. Eight of the low-floor buses are hybrid electric. 90 buses are required for peak hour service commitments.[4]

In fall 2009, a tender for 3 articulated buses was awarded to Nova Bus. These buses were delivered in April 2010 and officially unveiled at a press conference in front of city hall in June 2010. In 2014, several buses where taken in for maintenance. in September, just before the buses was re-entering service (while the bus driver was getting coffee) he/she left one of them running when a kid discovered it and took it on a 10-meter joyride before hitting another bus that was also re-entering service, causing both to go back into maintenance.

Transit Terminal

File:ProposedNewTerminal.jpg
Location of new terminal featuring island as well for raised platform stops near the building

On July 16, 2008, Saskatoon city council authorised a $4.2 million transit terminal to be constructed on a parking lot adjacent to the current on-street terminal. The new terminal would centre around a 600 square meter LEED-certified building with a green roof, surrounded by a ring of raised-platform stops. In addition to Saskatoon Transit, the building could also house a coffee shop and government offices such as social services or immigration.[6]

Bus barn re-location

City Transit Bus Routes has housed its headquarters around the 1913 original streetcar building at Avenue C and 24th Street. The city transit headquarters afterwards adopted this area for bus warehouse garages and offices between Avenue C and D at 24th Street. A seven million dollar consultant plan has been approved by the Saskatoon planning and operations committee to relocate the transit bus barns. The Caswell neighborhood will be revitalised by renovating the 13-acre (53,000 m2) area with a community for artists and musicians enhanced with a music festival.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Saskatoon Transit Unveils New Smart Card System, Dec 2009.[dead link]
  2. 2.0 2.1 David A. Wyatt, Transit History of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, 1989–2007.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 City of Saskatoon Archives. Significant Dates: A Saskatoon Chronology, 1999–2006.
  4. 4.0 4.1 IBI Group. Saskatoon Transit Strategic Plan Study, Saskatoon Transit, October 2005.
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]

External links